Namús participated in numerous combat sports from
the age of six She did a few months of karate (to red belt), seven
years of Tae Kwon Do (from ages 6 to 14, compiling a 14-0 record mainly against
Argentinian girls), and kickboxing (from ages 14 to 15).
She briefly gave up sports
(and put on weight)
but returned
after about a year with an increased interest in hard contact competition.
Although she originally found
boxing unappealing and "ugly" she
was inspired by watching the
Karen Kusama movie ‘Girlfight’.
At age 16, she was spotted by trainer Antonio Canedo
while working a bag in a gym
where her boyfriend also trained.

Canedo became Namús's trainer
despite early
doubts: "She turned up one day accompanied by two boys. She asked me how
much I charged for boxing lessons and whether I taught women. I said 'Yes' or,
rather, 'I don't know', but secretly I thought I'd be wasting my time. A week
or so later, I was up there in the ring with two pupils and I saw her standing
there with her purse. I signaled to her to wait a minute, finished up, went
down and took her to my office. I asked her whether she'd decided, she said
'Yes' and I looked at her with that divine face of hers and said: "Why don't you
wait a bit?" No, no, no. "Totally decided?" Yes, yes. And it reached the point
where I had no alternative because otherwise she'd have begun asking: "Why does
this man not want to accept me?" So I enrolled her and she began to learn, and
she learnt everything, she was a really quick study, she learned everything,
more or less, and began to train, and train and train. In the end, I was really
enthusiastic and wanted her to turn pro."

"He refusedto
take my money because he said I wouldn't last out the week", recalls Namús.
"I
tried to convince him that he was wrong, but he wouldn't listen. When he noticed
that I was still coming, he gave up."

Before long
Namús found herself in the ring in the Parque Hotel facing Ana Martínez in an
exhibition bout. "It was scheduled for three rounds," remembers
Namús, "but, without meaning to, I knocked her out in the third round. I had
a considerable advantage in weight; but then, she'd had seven years of training
to my three months."

On 24 November 2006
at an evening of boxing at the Palacio Peñarol in
Montevideo attended by the President of Uruguay, Namús
won the first of four "Uruguay vs Argentina" bouts by a second round
stoppage of Nara "La India" Mastandrea. The scheduled four-round amateur
bout was
described as follows: "The Argentinian was
tough, according to Boxeo Uruguayo, but Namús had the beating of her, and began
tightening her grip in the second round. The signs of despair at her own
impotence and the effects of the pounding she was taking could be seen by all as
Mastandrea received her second protective count of the round, and with the
crowd, sensing the imminence of the first Uruguayan victory of the night, now
willing her to victory, Namús, unaffected by the euphoria at ringside, responded
by tightening her grip still further – coolly, as though tightening a noose –
increasing not the tempo but the accuracy of her punching as the big girl's
resistance grew feebler, and finishing her off with forensic precision and a
succession of clean shots to the face that obliged the referee, Martín Carnevale,
to stop the fight (RSCH Rd. 2)".

A scheduled three-round exhibition
between Namús and Erondina Tabárez at Club Colon on 12 March 2007 was
stopped by the referee. As
reported on boxeouruguayo.com, the taller Namús bobbed
lightly around a rival anxious to close and exchange blows. Both displayed good
technique but Namús's punches were more accurate and began to leave
their mark on Tabárez's face. In the second round, Tabárez opted for
all-out attack but got the worse of the encounter. According to
other reports , Tabárez
lost her composure and began charging her tormentor
in the second round as though it were a bullfight. With her faster footwork and
quicker, harder hands, Namús was soon all over her, and referee Aníbal Andrade
was "forced to halt the massacre".

With
just three amateur fights behind her, Namús (at left in photo) made her
professional debut on May 18, 2007 at Palacio Peñarol in Montevideo.
She weighed in at 140 lbs and won a four-round unanimous
(40-38,40-36,40-38) decision over Maria Eugenia
López (139 lbs) from Buenos
Aires, Argentina. Uruguayan press
reports
said that "Namús
opened the first round with combinations of two, three or four punches,
as the occasion required, while the Argentinian relied on the classic
one-two. López was forced to clinch once or twice in the second round
and hurt near the end of the round by a tremendous straight left to the
jaw. Gathering confidence, Namús began to circle her opponent ... from
her tight, crouching stance, the 23-year-old Argentinian struck back,
with no thought of surrender, bruising Namus with her right cross on
several occasions as the final round opened."This fight was closer than the 4-point margin given to Namus on one
scorecard, as WBAN
reported
at the time: "There are two
views of this fight and there's no reconciling them. To the judges ... as well
as to Boxeo Uruguayo, for whom the 19-year-old came very close to
breaking her Argentinian rival with three-punch combinations in the final
minute, it was a clear victory for the Uruguayan. To Jorge Savia, who covered
the fight for Ovación Deportes, it was a draw (39-39). Alberto
Zacarías, the trainer (inter alia) of Sergio Acuña, was equally adamant: "It's
a crying shame. Very clearly the Uruguayan girl did not win. But there's bound
to be a return before too long, and I have no doubt, based on what the two of
them showed us here tonight, that next time we see them in the ring together,
they'll be disputing a major title."

"My opponent was very tough. I was struggling a bit because I was used to
easier fights", said Namús. "Everyone was telling me: 'Don't get
over confident.' I'd only fought three women prior to that and stopped them all
in the second round. The stadium was full of people I knew. A whole coachload of
them came from La Teja to watch me"

On July 13, 2007 at Hotel and Casino Conrad, Punta del Este, Uruguay, Namús (140
lbs) won a four-round unanimous (40-37,40-36,39-38) decision over Silvia Fernanda Zacarias
(137¾ lbs) of Buenos Aires, Argentina. This fight
generated less enthusiasm and controversy than Namus's debut. Namus came out
throwing more punches than her opponent in the opener, but Zacarias was more
accurate. The Argentinian caught Namús with several good crosses in the
evenly-fought second round. Zacarias performed better in the third round with Namús
against the ropes but Namús turned the tables in the fourth, forcing Zacaras to
defend against the ropes. Zacarias fell to 1-2-1 (0 KO's) with the loss (but has
continued to compete in Argentina, winning on points over Maria Eugenia Lopez,
but being KO'd in the sixth round by WBAN ranked junior featherweight Claudia
Lopez).

On January 19, 2008 at Hotel and Casino Conrad in Punta del Este, Namús
(137½ lbs) won a four-round unanimous (40-36,40-36,40-37) decision over
Juliana De Aguiar (140 lbs) of Rio Negrinho, Santa Catarina, Brazil,
who fell to 0-2-0. According to newspaper reports, De Aguiar controlled
the center of the ring while Namús moved in and out, striking and
moving out of range again. The power of Chris's punches gradually left
their mark on the face of the Brazilian as Namús boxed to the win.

On July 19, 2008 at Palacio Peñarol in Montevideo, Namús (139¾ lbs) TKO'd Perla
Hernández (5'4", 135¼ lbs) of Torreon, Mexico at 1:50 in the first round of a
scheduled eight-rounder for the WIBA Youth Junior Welterweight title.
“Namús only needed 1 min 50 seconds to annihilate
her opponent,” wrote
Dani Alonso Jr for Lo Mejor del Boxeo, but those 110 seconds included a
standing count. Stunned by a left-right combination, the Mexican girl was caught
by an uppercut and a right to the temple as she tried to make for the ropes, and
the fight was effectively over. The Argentinian referee gave her a standing
count but, as the commentator pointed out, she was only semi-conscious. Namús
retired to a neutral corner (only for the referee to direct her to that of her
Mexican opponent) and stood there sucking air into her lungs. Within seconds of
the resumption, Hernández was in trouble again, staggering backwards, gliding
her hand along the top rope as though it were a banister, and this time the
referee brought the proceedings to a definitive halt. “It was an intense
fight from the start,” explained the referee. “I gave the Mexican girl
one more chance, but she was very groggy, which is why I stopped the fight. The
Uruguayan girl is very powerful and has very long arms.”

“He was right to stop it,” conceded Hernández. “She
hits really hard and I felt those punches. There was no way I could recover in
time.” Hernandez, who had been boxing since 2003, fell to 5-5-1 (1 KO) with the loss, while
Namús
became Uruguay's first professional boxing world champion at any level.

Rojo on the canvas as Namus looks onPhoto: El País

On September 13, 2008 at Palacio Peñarol, Montevideo, Namús (140 lbs)
KO'd
Leticia Rojo (5′7½″, 139¼ lbs) of Sao Paulo, Brazil in the sixth round of a
scheduled eight-rounder. Rojo had arrived in
Montevideo with an entourage and demanded a private gymnasium where she
could rehearse her fight plan safe from the prying eyes of the press. She had
also
said“I’m
going to impose my game plan on Namús from the get-go, she won’t be able to live
with me in the ring.” Rojo, who suffered a cut over her left eye
that required six stitches, fell to 3-4-0 (2 KO's).

On January 23, 2009 at Hotel and Casino Conrad in Punta del Este, Namús
(137¾ lbs) won a six-round unanimous (60-56,60-55,60-55) decision over
Maria Elena Maderna (137¾ lbs) in a rematch of their May 2008 fight.
Maderna fell to 3-3-1 (0 KO's). Namus' clear margin of victory was questionedby Edgardo Rosani on Argentinian
website Boxeo-Boxing.com: "Namús began badly and lost the first two rounds,
Maderna dominating with her left. Slowly Namús began to find her range, her neat
left jab and accurate three- and four-punch combinations that began to unsettle
a very worthy opponent. In my opinion, Namús won 58-56 and not by the huge
margin the Uruguayan judges gave her." An un-named writer on
larepublica.com
said of Namús: "She took a lot of
punches... - she needs to improve her defense. Sections of the crowd whistled
the result."

On February 12, 2009 at Palacio Peñarol in Montevideo, Namús (140 lbs) won a
ten-round unanimous (98-93,100-88,99-94) decision over the unranked but well
tested Nicole Woods (5'8", 140
lbs) of Stone Mountain, Georgia, USA. Woods
was knocked down in round three, and received an eight count in round four
before coming back strongly in the sixth. Namús may have pushed too hard
for the knockout in the middle of the fight but her exceptional physical
condition allowed her to finish well despite
Wood's late rally. Namús improved her
record to 9-0 (2 KO's) while Woods fell to 7-4-0 (1 KO) with the loss.

Woods had belittled Namús before the fight
saying "I saw her fight with the Brazilian, Leticia Rojo, and the most recent
one with María Elena Maderna. I wasn't impressed." Woods had fought
Maderna herself in November 2008, winning an eight-round decision on a card were
she had originally expected to fight Namús,
who withdrew owing to an injury (sprained ankle).

The publicity surrounding the fight with Nicole Woods was intense and made
it clear that Namús has become a major sports
star in Uruguay.
According to an editorial in larepublica.com, "The fight between Chris
Namús and (Nicole Woods) captured the imagination of all sections of society -
at least in Montevideo. Someone who had to drive from Punta Carretas to the east
end of the city while the fight was on told us he didn't pass a single bar or a
restaurant that wasn't packed with people, all supporting the pretty and
well-spoken youngster."

On
August 8, 2009 at Estadio Cr. Gaston Guelfi/ Palacio Peñarol,
in Montevideo, Uruguay Lely Luz Florez (135½ lbs) of
Monteria, Colombia stunned Namús (139 lbs) and the Uruguayan fans when she stopped Namús with fierce combinations
at 1:44 in the first round of a 10-rounder
for the Interim WBC Junior Welterweight title. The aggressive Florez
repeatedly penetrated the taller Namús' defense with power shots that
immediately took their toll. Namús was reeling against the ropes before she went
to the canvas with about 30 seconds left in the round. Namús tried to struggle
back to her feet but instead teetered sideways and crashed to the canvas again,
so the referee stopped the bout. Florez improved her record to 14-3-0 (7
KO's) while Namús suffered her first loss and fell to 9-1 (2 KO's).

On October 30, 2009 at Estadio Cr. Gaston Guelfi/ Palacio Peñarol in Montevideo,
Chris
Namús (137¼ lbs) returned to the ring and won
a six round unanimous (60-54,60-54,60-53) decision over Maria Eugenia Quiroga
(133½ lbs) of Rosario, Santa Fe, Argentina, who fell to 2-4-1 (0 KO's) with the
loss.

On February 13, 2010 at Hotel Conrad Punta del Este Resort & Casino in
Maldonado, Uruguay, Chris
Namús (138½ lbs) TKO'd Adriana Salles (137¼
lbs) of Sao Paolo, Brazil at 1:23 in the seventh round of a scheduled 10-rounder
for the vacant World Professional Boxing Federation (WPBF) Junior Welterweight
title. Salles began the fight aggressively but Namus took charge after the third
round and forced two standing eight counts on Salles, who fell to 11-6-1 (5
KO's) with the loss.

On May 15, 2010 at Estadio Luna Park in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Chris
Namús (139¼ lbs) won a TKO over Neris Rincón
(a.k.a.Nurys Rincón Zavaleta, 137¼ lbs) of Arjona, Colombia at 1:19 in the
second round of a scheduled eight rounder. Rincón offered little resistance to
Namus, did not throw many punches and spent most of the fight covering up.
Rincón, who had only fought three times since 2005, received two standing eight
counts in the second round and fell to 9-3-2 (3 KO's).

On January 15, 2011 at Kibon in Montevideo,
Uruguay, Chris Namús TKO'd
35-year-old veteran Darys Pardo of Barranquilla, Colombia at 1:41 in
the fourth round of a scheduled eight-rounder. Pardo, who was down in
the second and fourth rounds and took a standing eight in the third,
fell to 22-9-3 (17 KO's) whileNamús improved her record to 14-1 (6 KO's).

On March 19, 2011 at Estadio Cr. Gaston Guelfi/Palacio Peñarol, in Montevideo, Chris Namús
(139 lbs) was pounded for almost ten rounds by Loli Munoz (132¾ lbs) of
Barcelona, Spain before the official timekeeper signalled the end of
the fight for the WPBF Junior Welterweight title at just 1:28 in the
temth round. Namús who had
found few answers for the smaller Munoz's aggressive attacks
throughout the fight, appeared to be almost out on her feet
in the last two rounds. The referee called a questionable
timeout in the ninth round after Namús lost her mouthpiece, and the tenth round was ended a full 32 seconds early. Namús
was initially awarded a controversial majority (96-95,95-95,97-93)
decision that caused Munoz to leave the ring in
disgust. WBAN reviewed video of all ten rounds of the
bout and stands by its assessment of the majority decision for Namús as a "rip off".

Fan
and media outrage at the official scoring were widely expressed. This
and the flagrant error in the tenth round timing led the Uruguayan
government sports ministry to demand a review of the bout by the
Uruguayan Boxing Federation. The UBF nullified the official
decision on March 21 and the WPBF also mandated a rematch for
their title.

The rematch was fought on June 11 2011, again
at Estadio Cr. Gaston Guelfi/Palacio Peñarol in Montevideo. Although Namús
(138½ lbs) fought a smarter fight against the hard-charging Munoz (133¼
lbs) on this occasion, the split (96-98,99-95,98-95) decision
for Namús was
again questioned. Namus was knocked down by a punch in
the sixth round and appeared to be assisted to her feet by the referee
before being given an eight count. Munoz had also landed the most
effective shots throughout the fight and appeared to have Namús in trouble several times. Munoz was unable to put Namús away, however, and this allowed closer rounds to be scored for Namús
to produce her eventual points margin on two cards.
WBAN considers the rematch another dubious decision for Namús.

Chris Namúsannounced her retirement from professional boxing in September 2011, but soon relented and came back to fight later that year.

On November 28, 2011 at Club
Atletico Irajá in Santana do Livramento, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil,
Chris Namús (140 lbs) won by a TKO at 1:33 in the first round
over Victoriana Britez (138¾ lbs) of Lambare, Paraguay. Britez fell to 4-2 (1 KO) with this loss.

On
December 17, 2011 at Parque Municipal Eva Perón, Lomas de Zamora,
Buenos Aires, Fernande Alegre
(137¼ lbs) of Buenos Aires won a ten-round unanimous
(97-93,97-93,98-94) decision over Chris Namús (139¾
lbs) defending the WBO Junior
Welterweight title. Namús took the initiative early in the fight but
was unable to prevent Alegre from getting inside where she is most
effective. Alegre used her speed, precision and superior conditioning
to wear Namús down later in the fight. Alegre improved to 12-1-1 (5
KO's) with the win.

On
April 7, 2012 at Club Atlético y Social Villa Calzada in Rafael
Calzada, Buenos Aires, Argentina. Fernanda Alegre of Argentina won a ten-round
unanimous (96-93,97-92,95-94) decision over Chris Namús of Uruguay
in a rematch for the WBO Junior Welterweight title. The
fight was closer than their first meeting. Alegre was cut on her
right eyelid while Namús suffered a large bruise and swelling over her left eye. Namús came
on stronger in the later rounds and forced Alegre to move and defend
more as the fight progressed but there were no knockdowns or clearly decisive rounds as both
bixers stood their ground and at times landed solidly. Namús, who had a point deducted in the
sixth round for low blows, left the ring in frustration after the judges' scores were announced for Alegre. The fight was broadcast by TyC Sports, which scored the bout 98-93 for Namús,
disagreeing strongly with the judges, who were from Brazil (96-93 for
Alegre), Chile (97-92 for Alegre) and Argentina (95-94 for Alegre). Alegre improved to 13-1-1 (5 KO's) while Namús dropped to 16-3 (7 KO's). [Video]

On June 23, 2013 at Palacio
Peñarol in Montevideo, Uruguay, Chris Namús won a ten-round unanimous
(98-93,99-91,98-93) decision in a rematch with Adriana Salles of
Brazil. Salles began the fight aggressively and initially
overcame Namús' height and reach advantages with the sheer volume
of punches thrown. Namús went to the canvas in the second round
but it was ruled a slip. Namús began to stand her ground better in the
middle rounds and wore Salles down with body punching and solid
body-head combos. Namús' main defense against Salles's flurries
was to retreat and and occasionally step up her work rate to go toe to
toe with her smaller opponent. Namús seemed to be the better
conditioned of the two as the fight went on through the eighth but
Salles rallied in the last two rounds. The scoring seemed
generous to Namús but the Brazilian might have had more
success if she had been able to land more clean combinations.
Salles kept coming forward to swarm Namús with looping punches
that did not have much heft behind them and rarely hurt
Namús, while Namús managed to connect with several strong
combinations to the head of Salles to ensure rounds went her way.
The fight was stopped twice after accidental clashes of heads
hurt both boxers but they showed good sportsmanship and respect
for each other as Namús progressed to 17-3 (7 KO's) while Salles fell to 12-7-1 (6 KO's). [Video]

Namús has said she is eager to disabuse the public of the idea that there’s
something unfeminine about boxing, which is why she
made a point of staying
as far away as possible from the masculine stereotype of the boxer: “People
think of boxing as a violent sport and one for men. Up there in the ring, I may
adopt a male stance, but outside the ring I'm very feminine and like to look my
best.”

The ring name 'Bombón Asesino' (Gorgeous Assassin) was given to her by
journalist Sandra Rodríguez. "My people had spent days trying to come
up with one and drawn a blank. I like my name 'Christian' even though people
keep telling me it's a boy's name. But Sarah gave me the name 'Bombón Asesino' ,
and because I appreciate her, and since it isn't that bad, I stuck with it."

Chris Namús had some boxing heritage as her grandfather was an amateur boxer. "He's not too happy about
me fighting - he's overprotective with me - but I like it. Fortunately I
have the support of my parents and paternal grandparents as well. They're
afraid, like all parents, but I tell them if anything bad is going to happen
to me, it's more likely to be when I'm shopping or crossing the road."

Namús gave up studies in forensic medicine to become a pro
boxer but she has said she wants to become a physical education
teacher eventually. Her boxing career had strong support from the state. The
President of Uruguay, Doctor Tabaré Vásquez (a practising
oncologist), was a driving force behind the growth of women's boxing in
the country. As well as being allowed to train from Monday to Friday
with Uruguayan commandos, she got meals and travel expenses, clothes from
Reebok and a sponsorship from Oasis (ice cream).Through her successful fights, media appearances and sponsorships, Namús
became a national phenomenon in Uruguay,
putting women's boxing on the map in her native country at a time when
the sport was struggling elsewhere.

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